23 phd-biomedical-signal-processing Fellowship positions at UiT The Arctic University of Norway
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Stig Brøndbo 4th August 2025 Languages English Norsk Bokmål English English Faculty of Engineering Science and Technology PhD Fellow in signal processing and modelling in the seafood industry Apply
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the appointment is based on a previous qualifying position PhD Fellow, research assistant, or the like in such a way that the total time used for research training amounts to three years. We process personal data
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Stig Brøndbo 25th September 2025 Languages English English English Faculty of Science and Technology PhD Fellow in synthetic organic chemistry Apply for this job See advertisement The position A PhD
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master's degree of 300 ECTS. All applicants should have a grade point average of B (or equivalent) on their master’s degree in order to be admitted to the PhD programme. The grade point average also applies
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2nd September 2025 Languages English Norsk Bokmål English English Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics PhD Fellow in Impact of Temperature on Embryonic Development of the stress axis in
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an integrated master's degree of 300 ECTS. All applicants should have a grade point average of B (or equivalent) on their master’s degree in order to be admitted to the PhD programme. The grade point average also
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is based on a previous qualifying position PhD Fellow, research assistant, or the like in such a way that the total time used for research training amounts to three years. We process personal data
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an integrated master's degree of 300 ECTS. All applicants should have a grade point average of B (or equivalent) on their master’s degree in order to be admitted to the PhD programme. The grade point average also
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(or equivalent) on their master’s degree in order to be admitted to the PhD programme. The grade point average also applies to 300 ECTS points integrated five-year master’s degrees, in which all courses are to be
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, the department hosts seven PhD candidates affiliated with various research groups and academic communities. The research group PrePast focuses on modern historical processes in the High North and the Arctic. A